Each year developing countries pay the West nine times more in debt repayments than they receive in
grants.

The UK Charity Comic Relief raised £26 million in 1997. Africa paid this back in debt service in just over a day.

Each person in the Third World owes about £250 to the West - much more than a year's wage for many.

Of the 32 countries classified as severely indebted low-income countries, 25 are in sub-Saharan Africa.

Africa spends four times as much on debt repayment as she does on healthcare.

In 1960, the income of the wealthiest 20 per cent of the world's population was 30 times greater than that of the poorest 20 per cent. Today it is over 60 times greater.

For a billion people, development is being thrown into reverse. After decades of steady economic advance, large areas of the world are sliding back into poverty.

Millions of people around the world are living in poverty because of Third World debt and its consequences.

Latin America owes £365 billion in debts to other countries and banks (36 per cent of what it produces - its
Gross National Product), while sub-Saharan Africa owes £140 billion (83 per cent of its total GNP). These
enormous debts mean that repayments to Western Creditors take priority and ordinary people suffer: in poor
health, in restricted access to education, in lack of employment and in limited ability to trade and provide for
themselves.

Health

Spending on healthcare has fallen in many of the world's poorest countries since the 1980s. This often means
that people have to pay for healthcare, so the poorest cannot afford it and simply go without. In Zimbabwe
spending per head on healthcare has fallen by a third since 1990 when a Structural Adjustment Programme was
introduced. In Uganda, £2 per person is spent on healthcare, compared with £11.50 per person on debt repayments.

Some improvements in health gained over the 1960s and 70s have been turned back or stopped in many countries
since the 1980s when the debt crisis broke. The number of children who die before the age of five, or before the
age of one, has risen in many deeply indebted countries, including Zimbabwe, Zambia, Nicaragua, Chile and Jamaica,
after decades of falling numbers. Diseases thought to be eradicated - tuberculosis, yaws, yellow fever - are
making a comeback in some countries as treatment and vaccination coverage declines.

Education

As schools are forced to charge fees, fewer people are able to send their children and education is mainly
available only to the better-off.

In sub-Saharan Africa the damage to education has been particularly significant: the percentage of 6-11 year
olds enrolled in school has fallen from nearly 60 per cent in 1980 to less than 50 per cent in 1990. In Tanzania,
school fees have been introduced as part of a Structural Adjustment Programme, leading to a drop in primary and
secondary school enrolment.

Employment

The IMF encourages hard-pressed governments to cut back spending and downsize government departments. This
often means a rise in unemployment and a cut in wages.

Real wages in most African countries have fallen by 50-60 per cent since the early 1980s. In Mexico, Costa
Rica and Bolivia average wages have fallen by a third since 1980. And unemployment has risen in many countries
in Africa and Latin America since the 1980s - in Zambia, Tanzania and Ghana, over 20 per cent of the working
population are unemployed. High levels of unemployment are counterproductive as there are fewer taxpayers to
contribute to the public purse. So governments raise less through taxation.

Trade

SAPs mean that countries must increase their export crops - and as many poorer countries are encouraged to
grow the same crops, they cause a glut on the international market and prices fall. So the workers on plantations
and farms get lower wages than ever.

Mexico first grew maize as a staple crop thousands of years ago. But today, thanks to IMF economic policies,
it has to import 20 per cent of this staple food from the USA.

The IMF encouraged Mexico to replace its vital food crops with cash crops - like strawberries and exotic
fruits. The IMF also made sure that any trade protection for the country's agricultural goods was lifted. So
Mexico's export crops now compete with those from the USA, which, as in many northern countries, are highly
subsidised and protected, using all available techniques to improve their quality.

Mexico is the loser, and the poor suffer. Almost 20 per cent of Mexicans have no cash income; more than 30 per
cent make less than the minimum wage of $3 a day.

Jubilee 2000 calls for...

cancellation of the backlog of unpayable debt of the poorest countries - most of which are in Africa. Such a
cancellation will not on its own eradicate poverty - but it will remove a significant barrier to progress and
justice. The year 2000 could signal the beginning of dramatic improvements in healthcare, education, employment
and development for countries crippled by debt.